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Journal ArticleDOI

Competition and spacing patterns in desert shrubs

Donald L. Phillips, +1 more
- 01 Mar 1981 - 
- Vol. 69, Iss: 1, pp 97-115
TLDR
Spacing patterns of shrubs were studied on a series of sites in the Mojave and Sonoran Deserts, suggesting the increasing importance of competition as the plants grow.
Abstract
SUMMARY (1) Spacing patterns of shrubs were studied on a series of sites in the Mojave and Sonoran Deserts. Both aggregation and regularity in dispersion of individual shrubs were fairly common. Aggregation may result from vegetative reproduction or environmental heterogeneity, and regularity from competition among plants. (2) Small shrubs tend to be clumped, medium-sized ones tend to a random arrangement, and large shrubs tend to a regular pattern. This suggests the increasing importance of competition as the plants grow. (3) Further evidence of interference between plants was provided by the correlations of plant size with the distance to their neighbours. (4) Root systems were extensive enough to abut or overlap each other in the interplant spaces. (5) Most plants tended to have neighbours of the same species rather than other species. (6) None of these results depended on position along the considerable climatic gradients across the Mojave and Sonoran Deserts.

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Primary Succession and Ecosystem Rehabilitation

TL;DR: This paper provided the first comprehensive summary of how plant, animal and microbial communities develop under the harsh conditions following such dramatic disturbances, and examined the basic principles that determine ecosystem development and applied the general rules to the urgent practical need for promoting the reclamation of damaged lands.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Role of Competition in Plant Communities in Arid and Semiarid Regions

TL;DR: This paper reviews the available evidence for competition in plant communities in arid and semiarid regions and demonstrates that competition certainly occurs in these communities and involves many different species; in several instances it appears to be important in the determination of community structure.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pattern of Self‐Thinning in Jack Pine: Testing the Random Mortality Hypothesis

N. C. Kenkel
- 01 Aug 1988 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the pattern of self-thinning in a 0.25-ha even, pure stand of jack pine in the boreal forest near Elk Lake, Ontario, Canada.
Journal ArticleDOI

The intensity of competition versus its importance: an overlooked distinction and some implications.

TL;DR: It is argued that intensity and importance need not be correlated, and so measurements of the intensity of competition are not directly relevant to this debate, and it is suggested that competition can be unimportant even if it is very intense: no such hypothesis is possible unless importance is distinguished from intensity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Beyond description: the active and effective way to infer processes from spatial patterns

TL;DR: This work identifies and defines a rapidly emerging alternative approach, which it formalize as "space as a surrogate" for unmeasured processes, that is used to maximize inference about ecological processes through the analysis of spatial patterns or spatial residuals alone.
References
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Population Biology of Plants

Journal ArticleDOI

Population Biology of Plants.

Journal ArticleDOI

Distance to Nearest Neighbor as a Measure of Spatial Relationships in Populations

Philip J. Clark, +1 more
- 01 Oct 1954 - 
TL;DR: In this article, the authors studied the vulnerability of several species to trapping on the islands and found that the islands appeared to lag behind the mainland in the development of their populations and the populations of small mammals fluctuate quite widely and the several populations appear to be somewhat independent of each other.
Journal ArticleDOI

Contribution of Shrubs to the Nitrogen Economy of a Desert-Wash Plant Community

TL;DR: The average nitrogen content of shrub leaves, stems, and roots was 1.31,.87, and.80%, respectively as mentioned in this paper, and areas between shrubs averaged 0.19% nitrogen.